In today’s business environment, there is constant need to look for new opportunities. The risk of doing business as usual means failure. How can we take advantage of new emerging technologies? We get overload of new products and services, but it is not easy to see the real trends.
In this lecture we look at how to spot trends and how to recognize shift in people’s behaviour. We also explore some tactics we can apply to find new business models and introduce the Innovator's Method, a framework for starting a business in a lean way.
2. Reading:
•IBM 1100100 and counting
•Competition is for Losers
•Understanding the Job Clayton Christensen,
professor at Harvard Business School talks
about the job to be done
•The Innovator´s Method
3. ...a kind of shadow future,
hovering on the edges of
the present state of things,
a map of all the ways in
which the present can
reinvent itself
Steven Johnson
Adjacent Possible
4. Why is IBM still alive and
thriving after so long, in an
industry characterised
perhaps more than any other
by innovation and change?
Economist:
1100100
and
counting
Case Study
8. “IBM is not a technology
company, but a company
solving business problems
using technology”
– George Colony
Economist:
1100100
and
counting
Platform Shifts
10. 1. Maintain connection to customers
2. Less hierarchical and more open
3. Business relevant research
4. Globally integrated
5. Financial planning – get out of
commoditized business
Economist:
1100100
and
counting
Platform Shifts
11. WHAT IS THE SECRET TO BE SUCCESSFUL
ENTREPRENEUR?
12. "There is no real formula."
- Peter Thiel
Author: Zero to One
20. "All happy companies are different
because they found something
unique to do, all unhappy
companies are alike, because they
failed to escape the sameness that
is competition."
- Peter Thiel
21. The Nature of Progress
0 to 1
1 to n
Technology
doing new things
Vertical
Globalisation
copying existing things
Horizontal
Peter Thiel: Zero to One
24. Targeting overshot customers or
non-consumption
“Good-enough” can be great
Do what competitors won’t
Looking for Opportunities
25. Targeting overshot customers or
non-consumption
Removes barriers that constrain
the ability to consume
Overshooting customers needs
Hidden beauty in undesirable or
invisible markets
26. Remove barriers that constrain the ability to
consume
Example: photography
Kodak’s Brownie
Camera
Skill
32. 1. Creating a Computer Game for mobile
What is the barrier for these:
4. Health Care
5. University level education
2. Making an Music Album
3. Publishing a Novel
6. Rent your house
Remove barriers that constrain the ability to
consume
33. Targeting overshot customers or
non-consumption
Make the complicated simple
Don’t let the mainstream derail you
Innovate, don’t force
48. Net Promoter Score
How likely are you, on a scale of 0 (not at all likely) to 10
(extremely likely), to recommend this product or service to a
colleague or friend?
A product’s NPS is the percentage of promoters (those who
score themselves 9 or 10) minus the percentage of detractors
(scores 0–6).
Net promoter score = % promoters minus % detractors
49. Design for Delight
Most successful companies didn’t just off er products that were
easier to use; they off ered products that delighted customers.
• Gain deep customer empathy
Understand customers better than they understand themselves
• Go broad to go narrow
Generate lots of solutions before borrowing the list
• Experiment rapidly with customers
Seek feedback early and often
51. Innovator’s Method
Step 1. Insight: savor surprises
Step 2. Problem: discover the job-to-be-done
Step 3. Solution: prototype the minimum
awesome product
Step 4. Business model: validate the
go-to-market strategy
52. Leverage the behaviors, questioning, observing,
networking, and experimenting — to search broadly for
insights about problems worth solving.
Innovator’s Method
Step 1. Insight: savor surprises
What problem is nobody solving?
56. Rather than starting with solutions, start by exploring the
customers’ need or problem— the functional, social, and
emotional job-to-be- done— to be sure you’re going after a
problem worth solving.
Innovator’s Method
Step 2. Problem: discover the job-to-be-done
What is the customer really buying?
57. People don’t want to buy a quarter-inch drill.
They want a quarter-inch hole.
Job to be Done
58.
59. Instead of developing full-scale products, leverage
theoretical and virtual prototypes of multiple solution
dimensions. Then iterate on each solution to develop a
minimum viable prototype and eventually a minimum
awesome product.
Innovator’s Method
Step 3. Solution: prototype the minimum
awesome product
60. Once you’ve nailed the solution, you’re ready to validate
the other components of the business model, including the
pricing strategy, the customer acquisition strategy, and the
cost structure strategy.
Innovator’s Method
Step 4. Business model: validate the
go-to-market strategy.